(U//FOUO) Improvised incendiary devices (IIDs) typically are less expensive to make than improvised explosive devices but still are capable of creating mass casualties and causing widespread fear and panic.

(U//FOUO) Improvised incendiary devices (IIDs) can be constructed easily from everyday materials available at hardware and grocery stores.

(U//FOUO) IIDs can be used against many types of infrastructure targets; violent extremists have used them successfully in attacks in the United States and overseas.

(U//FOUO) The DHS/Office of Intelligence and Analysis (I&A) has no credible or specific intelligence indicating current terrorist attack planning featuring use of IIDs against infrastructure in the United States. The ease with which IIDs can be constructed and used, however, makes it difficult to detect and prevent such attacks.

(U) Improvised Incendiary Devices Can Be Constructed from Common Materials

(U//FOUO) An IID consists of an ignition source, a flammable or combustible fuel —including kerosene, cigarette and charcoal lighter fluid, motor fuels, such as gasoline or diesel, and reactive chemicals—and some type of container, such as propane cylinders, plastic pipes, bottles, and cans. IIDs range in sophistication from very simple and easily-constructed Molotov cocktails—which are made by filling a glass bottle with fuel and lighting a rag placed in the top—to more complicated timed devices consisting of a sodium and acid mixture.

(U//FOUO) The accessibility of many types of infrastructure, such as government facilities, national monuments, various transportation and energy assets, and commercial facilities, make them susceptible to IID attacks. Passenger trains, ferries, and other public conveyances are among the more attractive targets for terrorists because they often have large numbers of people enclosed in concentrated areas that are difficult to evacuate rapidly.

(U) Previous Use of Improvised Incendiary Devices in the United States

(U//FOUO) Violent extremists have used IIDs against government facilities and vehicles, commercial facilities, and railroad lines. Their most frequent targets have been healthcare, educational and research facilities, and scientists and research personnel.

(U) Improvised Incendiary Device Attacks Abroad

(U) Terrorists using IIDs achieved their most notable success in a February 2007 attack by Kashmiri operatives who placed six suitcase IIDs in three cars of the “Friendship Express” passenger train traveling from India to Pakistan. Four of the six IIDs ignited, causing fires in two passenger cars that killed 68 people and injured 13. Other incidents, like those in the United States, have achieved mixed results.

— (U) In May 2008, an ethnic Uighur woman aboard a domestic flight bound for Beijing, China attempted to ignite a flammable liquid in a beverage can. She aroused suspicions when she exited the lavatory to pick up a second can after the first failed to ignite and produced a smell of gasoline.

— (U) In June 2007, two men drove a burning jeep with several gasoline-filled containers into the main terminal building at the Glasgow, Scotland airport, causing structural damage to the front of the building but no casualties.

— (U) In July 2006, two men plotted to attack two trains in Germany using suitcases filled with butane and gasoline, but the devices failed to ignite. German prosecutors claimed, however, that the trains would have become “balls of fire” had the IIDs functioned as planned.

Contribute Documents and Information

How to Contribute

Public Intelligence uses the SecureDrop document submission system developed and maintained by the Freedom of the Press Foundation to accept documents and securely communicate with anonymous sources.
For maximum privacy, please consider making your contribution while using a network that is not associated with yourself or your employer.
Download and install the Tor Browser Bundle from the Tor Project website at https://www.torproject.org.
Open the Tor Browser and enter the following URL:

arujlhu2zjjhc3bw.onion

Follow the instructions to contribute documents and information. You will be given a codename consisting of several random words. You can return to the SecureDrop site at a later date and enter this codename to see if we have responded to your submission. You can also respond to our questions or comments and provide more information if necessary.
For your own security, please consider the ramifications of discussing your contribution with anyone else.
For added security and privacy, consider using the Tails operating system to contribute. If you are knowledgeable about security software, consider encrypting your submission with our public PGP key prior to submission.
For more information on how SecureDrop works and how to use it as a source, see the official documentation maintained by the Freedom of the Press Foundation.

Security and Privacy Information

SecureDrop is accessed exclusively through a Tor "hidden service" that is designed to conceal your identity and location from us while allowing for secure connection utilizing end-to-end encryption. SecureDrop does not record your IP address, browser configuration, operating system or and will not utilize persistent cookies to track your activities.
Our SecureDrop servers are operated and maintained under the direct physical control of Public Intelligence.
We will retrieve your contribution and decrypt it on a computer that has never been connected to the internet with no hard drive installed or wireless communications interfaces.
Please remember that while we have made every effort to provide a secure platform for contributing information to this site, we cannot guarantee your privacy or security and make no representations about the service. Ultimately, your security and privacy is your own responsibility.